﻿NEW YORK. 135 



Artificial shell deposits containing stone axes, arrowpoints, Hint 

 knives, etc., in the vicinity of Keypoit. 



Plat and description by Chas. Rau, Sm. Rep., 1864, pp. 370-374. 



Ocean County. 



Shell heaps near the village of Manahawkin. Explored; animal 

 bones and stone articles found. 



Am. Antiq., vol. 8 (1886), p. 374. 



N E W Y O E K . 



Allegany County. 



Three Indian forts not far from Belvidere. 



Barber and Howe, Hist. Coll. of N. Y., p. 56. 

 Indian cemetery near Belfast. 



Reported by E. A. Byrns, Sni. Rep., 1879, p. 445. 



Broome County. 



Mound about 2 or 3 miles south of the village of Greene, Chenango 

 County. Examined in 1829 ; contained human bones, arrowheads, 

 silver ring, stone chisels, etc. (Ma^^ be in Chenango County.) 



Indian oven disclosed by the washings of the Susquehanna River at 

 Binghamton. 



Remains of an old fortification on the Susquehanna River not far 

 from Binghamton and near the Great Bend. 



Many Indian ornaments of silver found in the vicinity. 



Deposit of brass or co[)per kettles near Ouaquaga, about 14 miles 

 from Binghamton. 



Mentioned in Annals of Binghamton, pp. 143, 155, 156, 172, 173, and 220. 



Cattaraugus County. 



Circular inclosure on the bluff overlooking the Red House Creek, 1 

 mile above its junction with the Alleghany, in Red House Township 

 Cheney, Anc. Mon. West. N. Y. (1859), p. 42, PI. 5; Larkin, Anc. Man in Am., 

 p. 18. 



Mound in the town of Napoli, in the valley of the Conewango, half a 

 mile west of The Narrows. 



Circular embankment 80 rods west of the preceding, on the opposite 

 side of the stream, and up the Red House Valley. 



Mentioned by Larkin, Anc. Man in Am., pp. 16, 17. 

 A burial mound and other evidences of ancient occupancy formerly 

 existed where the village of Randolph now stands. 



Larkin, Anc. Man in Am., pp. 6 and 10; Cheney, Anc. Mon. West. N. Y. (1859), 

 p. 41, PL 4. 



Group of small mounds near the confluence of the Allegheny Riv^er 

 and Glean Creek. 



McCanley's Hist. N. Y. (1829), p. 113. Larkin alludes in "Ancient Man in 

 America" (1880), p. 31, to a burial mound at Oleau, probablj' of the same 

 group as that mentioned by McCauley. 



